FRONTIERS OF ZOOLOGYDale A. Drinnon has been a researcher in the field of Cryptozoology for the past 30+ years and has corresponded with Bernard Heuvelmans and Ivan T. Sanderson. He has a degree in Anthropology from Indiana University and is a freelance artist and writer. Motto: "I would rather be right and entirely alone than wrong in the company with all the rest of the world"--Ambroise Pare', "the father of modern surgery", in his refutation of fake unicorn horns.

Wednesday, 11 September 2013

Mosasaurs in Real Life

Since the Mosasaurs had a sharklike (but reversed) tail it stands to reason that they had some sort of a back fin as well for stabilization. The Ichthyosaurs had a similar tail design and also had the need of a back fin (and also had four other limbs) Since the back fin was evidently NOT a high obvious triangular fin such as Ichthyosaurs and sharks have, a long low fin (centered on the area of the shoulder perhaps) would be the most logical alternative arrangement.

And since there were several very distinct kinds of Mosasaurs, there is no reason to insist that no evidence for a back fin in any one of the known species or genera precludes the possibility of any of the others from ever having a back fin.

Ancient ocean predators were reptiles that swam like sharks

Nidhi SubbaramanNBC News

Sep. 10, 2013 at 11:00 AM ET

Johan Lindgren

A 70-million-year old fossil of a young mosasaur indicates that the marine reptiles had a forked tail like today's sharks.

The leviathans of the Late Cretaceous ocean were swift-swimming lizards, large as sperm whales and finned like sharks. New evidence shows how similar the flippers of these top predators from 90 million years ago were to the limbs of everyone's favorite predatory fish today.
The first mosasaur fossil was discovered in the 1700s. From their run-on spines, researchers first guessed the animals were related to snakes, and later proposed that the ocean-swimming reptiles swam like fish. Rare soft-tissue preserved on the new prognathodon fossil, one member of the family of mosasaurs, shows a well-defined body plan and the trademark shark-like forked tail, supporting that theory.

Johan Lindgren

This fossil, collected from the Maastrichtian of Harrana site in Jordan in 2008, contains the first soft tissue evidence of the tail shape of the mosasaur.

"For more than 200 years there hasn't been a single specimen showing the outlines of the fins and most important, the tail fin," Johan Lindgren, a paleontologist at Lund University in Sweden, told NBC News. Lindgren is a member of the team that describes the fossil in the Sept. 10 issue of Nature Communications.

Stefan Sølberg

Mosasaurs could grow up to 50 feet in length, and were the top predators of the Late Cretaceous oceans.

The new fossil, only about 6 feet long and therefore a young 'un, adds to evidence that the mosasaurs, which started out as land-living reptiles, entered the water and changed their body plan over tens of millions of years.
"The proportions of its body are amazingly similar to those that we see in pelagic sharks," Lindgren said. He expects that other, later mosasaurs may have been "even more fish-like than this guy."
Remarkably, the mosasaurs, the Cambrian-age ichthyosaurs before them, and today's toothy sharks — all top ocean predators in their time — independently arrived at roughly the same, "drop-shaped" stream-lined body plan and a two pronged tail.
Unlike sharks, the spine of the mosasaurs curved downward into the lower lobe of the tail. This may have been designed to assist the reptilian swimmers come up to the surface for air, Lindgren said.

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